The evening world. Newspaper, August 29, 1904, Page 10

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‘at New York as Gecond-Class Mall ber of columns of advertising f | Number of columns of advertising / months, 1903 . INCREASE. ..000000s0008 _ We ether six-day paper, morning or evening, In New A EVER carried in regular editions in six consecutive } months such a volume of display advertising as The Evening UO} Werke carried daring tne first six months, 1904, GOOD-WILL IN INDUS and employed which comes with by giving to its employees in ‘4 d b Ke fare easy of application, They are drawn @hould furnish an effective objet lesson ©) extended industrial distrust, y |) Mature and Monopoly.—The invention in England of a new |°arth where two people can live as| , y fuel called Radiant, which ts “as cheap nvention in Chicago of a process of tr into coal, and in Pittsburg of a proces: forests of rubber trees in Brazil, and of , “Muthing over there quite fills the vold, © A week to Labor Day, That should be " yathieve something to celebate, it which dolays their beginning, It What this element {s capable of is ) are there yet, and that ts as far as we've g 7 Nem with its uncertainties to bring about ition. to take best advantage of the ‘geries between the clubs. Complaint of the kissee. Magistrate Higginbotham, although } emaotion. to feel thot consolidation has BAR sympathy in furthest Brockiyn bout him,” igatory up there e ™. He e an dig ore or * 4 a8 yet Ht hav. ‘are 0 ie gton Star. n yranno * MG, ne! ' + al oe Y the mowwigiht) ENCOURAGEMENT, “de S fais FS My fon," raid the older simian, “ Wurity It was demonstrated thet “Artcul|!O* BF Advce and Til make @ monkey jout of vou!"~Pittsburg Dispateh HORRORS OF WAR, “Fifteen minutes to Harlem” beg. we may) “A war correspondent’s Life t full of HW was to the first of the Atteen, dangers. t itr’ we asked of the re- turned 5 sf wit in idle gloom “It ta, ho replied. "Why, over in fill your dining-room, Tokin ono of the best correspondents Row, New York, Bntered at tne ences Is Doomed. 'y{The Evening World First Evening World during first six vening World during first six ‘There is & refreshing story of good-will between em-| to eat our funde, and to return to be. ‘A great lumbor company of the busy cfty in Northern loat recently by fire a oullding essential to its en-| “guch a thing as taking their aweet- On Saturday jast the 135 men who work for| hearts buggy riding, or to the theatre, company got together and in ten hours, regardless) °° Sending them sweets, flowers, books anion rules and scornful of wages, replaced the two- structure from foundation timbers to roof. To this! daily from young women who of appreciation the members of the lumber firm| "ver been @ hundred miles from Br ~ Behind this incident of a red-letter day, and making iy /posaible, were the principles of mutual consideration, A ie and esteem which make {deal conditions of} young man, certainly made out a pretty | ‘ fi wherever they are firmly held. These principles} good case for the prosecution. This is 7 the common sense and common interest of mankind The Paterson demonstration ct how well they work|money javishly to show off. For in as inexhaustible, giving treble the heat of Which will effect great economies; the discovery of vast in the Transvaal capable of an output as large as that Of the De Boers mines—those developments go to show! he's rare, I'll the unsubstantial basis on which monopolies of natural . Products are bullt. Nature and Invention In combination|kind that takes you out to luneh and | { sake @ partnership which it is hard for trusts to control. |hypnotizes you Into ordering chicken ‘ It ts after the returning Americans bring thelr ‘dollare|change. He had treated me to a feast home that Europe realizes afresh what a big country this ls, [of this kind and told me that he was Be. the men tn tho building trades, employers and employed, to|him to eat If he got hungry between RED TAPE VS, NEW SCHOOLS. ee Btrikes and lockouts delay the completion of new! siavs he'd bought for himaeif?’ bulldings for the city. There is a more constant’ 0 much for the stingy man. But - thterview, printed yesterday, with a member of the > Building Committee of the Board of Education, This Isa} whither she hay conducted the young valngle instance: man who took her out for a walk, A ite was selected on Oct, 28 last year on One Hundred !0lters And stares so pointedly at the Twontleth street near Seventh avenue, Condemna- ['¥O"Pound hox of chorolates on the Provecdings were autheriz@l on May 13. On May % the [RNY Counter a to make him consider ) papgra were sent to the Corporation Counsel's office, They} self lucky to get off with something ‘» A Very moderate estimate places at 75, “of pupils who, because of a lack of seats, will have to} peuscs leave him very litle money to divide time in the New York achodls in the coming study | ‘pend on his own amusements, But for ie year. Probably the number will be much nearer 100,000,|'he girl whose one Idea of a man who } Red tape—with politics back of it in earlier years—has | ‘OWS her the least attention Is to work Gone more with ite certainties than has any labor probd-|ig no excuse Lat ws havo this constant obstacle to progress re-|*!Utely no concern as to what men | Boved at the earliest possible moment, that we may be in y * dadustrial disputes shall have settled themselves, really tke, New York's two baseball teams continue to be “'way up," [desire to have money speme on them _ ut Messrs, Brush and McGraw will be ‘way down In the outweighs everything else. A young popular esteem if they stand in the way of @ post-season| woman of this kin@ complained to me Diamonds are again on the rise. According to the eco-|in her wedding ring at her own ox- @omie argument of Secretary Shaw, they will soon be hign|pense hecause her husband had given eHough 40 that no poor man need go without them, her a dinky 'ttle thing that she was ANTI-KISSING “COP” REBUKED. bg rel ? “| saw Esau kissing Kate,” Policeman Jackel, Of | in three months. 4 ‘Williamsburg, might have quoted in Magistrate Higgin- — otham’s court on Saturday. Only, instead of Esau it was ‘Abgust, and instead of Kate !t was Pauline, which Is a SOME OF THE @flerence wMhout a distinction, The man in the moon ‘ Saw what happened, too, for it was midnight and good- BEST JOKES night, and the moon was high. But the emile frozo on OF THE DAY, ‘the face of Luna's chief observer when he saw not only 7? the kiss but the policeman arresting the kisser on no wey Perhaps it is fortunate that August's case came up be-| ,, ponceive of any nan of judicial mind acting after differ. | “Of course, that's true."* @nt fashion. What the Magistrate did was to set August| "suppose you're Ashing for a In a hurry and advise Jackel to seek his next job ay | 78 MEN! Philadelphia Presa Grove or on the board-welk at Asbury. So youth- SUMMER “CIRCUS. romance trinmphest and love was at liberty to resume |, )n0"s on Are see Mee here? traditivnal !sugh at locksmiths and other triflers wi h|the summer ree “ Vet SUTTVR Ot HiwSo far as the Bench is concerned it Is creditable his ory |." F Sompieh hes thus becn made in Williamsburg. Manhattaa a revision of requiremer The Stingy Young Man ter, ——— ‘ By Nixola Greeley-Smith. HE young in women of L 0 gane- 7,700 in have risen In and sent a protest to the town news paper against mingy young men, They say of them “They are content to alt . 6,019 1,681 homes, allow- “fe fl us to fan & . them,, sing or N. GREELEY-8MITH. play for them, TRY. the news from| stow the blessings of their company upon us, But when anything comes up Involving an expediture of money, that is a different matter. or music {s unknown.” Now, very similar plaints are heard way and it is interesting to consider the evening 8} wiethar or not they are justified by , at which most pleasing sentiments were ex-| tacts or are merely conclusions | ‘ drawn from unfortunate individual ex as to the atinginess of the New York naturally from | What she anid: "He's not #o stingy aa he's sh, For there are times when he'll spend in this hour of/stance, he doesn't hesitate to take you to a swell rostaurant to dine, A New York restaurant Ia the one place on as fireclay” and|cheaply as one, And he doesn't pay fire; tho|®®¥ more for two than he would for rming peat himself, He may even bring you candy. of steel making you flowers, you can make up y that he's all right, for then he bh iis money solely to ple you. a diamond mine ) He's the croquettes and pays the bill with Just going on a walking tour through Connecticut and asked me if I'd go'with time enough for|him to buy some chocolate slabs for farmhouses. Well, do you know that man actually marched me into a candy » bought his chocolate and didn't off-r me a thing—not even one of the is known as red | at about the cold-blooded mercenary revealed ia an girl that values people only by what they spend on her; the young woman Who on her way to the soda fountain, ot with that new under 7 The stingy young man may have reason for his stinginess, He may have iu 000 the umber! , mother oF sisters whose living ex- him to the Umit of his pocketbook thera this cumulative] It is characteristic of a great many New York girls to give themaelves ab- they do not care for particularly spend In thelz entertainment, but to show In- hour when the |fnite consiterauon for any one they But there are others in whom the the other day that after her marriage ahe “was oblized to have more gold put ashamed to wear and positively refused | Needless to say, they were divorced > THE BEST BAIT. “My husband saya if you want to be essful when you're fisiing yor f is difficn't tolmuetn't tat.” oie ee ‘Oh, only three rings.” reptied the , Kup her haad.-Chi- cago Kewor ld 18 done much for “How ote ial But the Eastera | yoyo , Senn eerie THE » EVENING w WORLD'S & | port, Ind} a thelr might]: around our}, ew York girl, whom I consulted | for he can sit and eat half af} ¢ It up before he goes, But if he sends | ‘ me 2 f) Mary Jane, Her Tabby and Kickums Again, w# & s A Strenuous Lesson in Manners and the Exciting Sequel in Which Two Fond Papas “ Tin Teath MANNERS tf) papa! 4 KICKUMS PUNCHED ME IN WHE By Martin Green. The Supply of Colonels ana of Pimply Noblemen Who Catch American Heiresses Never Runs Short. i | SEB,” said the Clgar-Store Man, “that another THATS THE way I GET it SOmE TIMES! marriage of a young woman of the Newport socley set to an English rour-flush has turned out to be a bloomer.” - “Tt the stories they print about the mam + who married tho girl are true,” replied The Man Higher Up, “be, must have been a shine of the first magnitude, Such elghteen-carat cad couldn't get to first base in e any but the most exclusive society, He would be ( spotted for a high polish at a shop girls’ picnic and given tho razoo in a holy minute, “They poke a lot of fun at the sports who gather , around to shake the hand of the man who has shaken the hand of a champion prize-fighter, but the hand that has shaken the hand of King Edward can hit the front door of Newport a sight tap and the door swings open, It is humiliating and exasperating to an ordinary, debt- paying, hard-working American citizen to see the way our representatives of the highest society fall to bound~ ers and skates from the other side. | Tun TEACH You MANNERS~— YOU NINNY— x HE! How DARE You STRIKE MY cHiLo- You at “It seems to me that the way passé and pimply no blemen and lantern-jawed outlaws from the discounted first families of Furope are enabled to put the kibosh «& q on our American heiresses {s due to the training of what ‘ boarding-house gossip circles call our first families, >| The blame for the broken hearts of American girls who have been sold to titled blacklegs rests solely on the fathers and mothers of the girls, “The ignorance of the average American soclety girl "“ concerning everything outside her own set is appalling, >} She is trained by an ambitious and flinty-hearted mother solely to make a good showing in the matri- montal stakes, and what is considered by the mother to , be a good showing is enough to give a healthy-minded person a sensation resembling an understudy for sea- sickness. It is no wonder th reasonably rich young American prefers to remain a bachelor when he sees himsel( outclassed by poor imitations of men that he f wouldn't throw Into a garbage wagon with the ald of rubber gloves.” “There seems to be a glamor about a title that makes 4 woman with money and @ daughter blind,” admitted , the Cigar-Store Man, ‘The yen for a title {s not entirely confined to rich women with daughters,” sald The Man Higher Up. “It was discovered recently that there are so many colonels in this country that a movement was inaugurated to shut off the supply.” You yis' WAIT TILL | TOMORROW: When Radium Kills. It has been demonstrated by Prof, Curle that the emana-" tions given off by radium cause the death of the smaller animals when breathed by them, Experiments were con- lucted on gulnea pigs in glass jars, After the animal had vreathed the alr charged with the emanations for a certain ime, varying from one hour to several hours, the respira fon became short and abrupt. He rolled himself up in # all with his hair standing on end. Then he fell into a pro- ‘ound torpor and hfs body became cold. An exam{nation of he animal showed an Intense pulmonary congestion, The composition of the blood was modified, especially as regards the white corpuscles, and thelr number diminished. The Usaues of the animal were found to be radfo-active, When the body of the guinea pig was placed on a photographie’ platg@wrapped in black paper it gave an Image in whieh Ve hairs were very clearly defined, Finest Kite Made at Home. ‘ SOLLORDO-® 9-6-9-8-2-B9-2-= 2-2 F-4-4- 2-3-4 9-4-4-2E9-> Ney SPOONING =O? ALOWeD. oe ¢ d rs 4 ¢ © rs ; i ‘ ® @ ® Bome Kite Deoorations, ° « $ a : tO Jno ‘ * NCE > JU INNOCENCE, y First, Becond Third ‘The | 3 ‘ NO HAND-HOLDING ALLOWED,* step. step, string. ten , : a TCAD DAYS. these, alackaday, at Arverne and Rockaway. Capt. Kreuscher.tond the sands where once the spoons bloomed as in after-dinner coffee cups ERE are the directions to help you in making o ie iS Cupid's for, says beach spooning has to go, No more ‘neath the sily ryinow are as Sahara wastes--the unhugged variety. Think of It! clase kite: g moon can the couples sit and spoon, or upon the countless sands ait In] “No person of persons shall be allowed to sit on the sand under the hoard- The long stick should be a trifle over 61-2 feet ty Spits: while holding hands, Hugging, too, has now been banned, Mkewlselwaik aftor dark, length, and the cross stick should be a trifle over 31-2 feet @sitting on the sand ‘neath the b vik after dark, where they used to ait} “No hand-holding allowed. long. Sand spark. Sad the lovers once eo gay at Arverne and Rockaway, # the beach ts a public place, kissing ts strictly forbiddg, Fasten the cross stick to the long one at one-third the / % © What do you thvnx of that? “Hugging strletly forbidden, distance from the top (use fine brass wire for this purpose), » Outrageous! Vhe peach ts for bathers and not to be used as a trysting place.” Then take four stieka, and by means of brass wire fasten © In the few sweyring edicts Cape. Kreuscher has banished all Joy of life) &Te transit gloria sneonibus (the spooners are sick about It). them to the two tnain roda in the form of @ diamond, ‘Then stretch a thin plece of hazel wood across the top” 4 BEBODIG444 24-9994 9-94D40404-09-000404-46-060004 | and fasten It Into a curved shape. ae —— ~ Stretch the brass wire from the ends of the cross atiok . : i ; a i % to the foot of the long rod. Now get some first-class glue (or make some @ @ LETTERS, QUERIES AND ANSWERS B Qo c its ie crc nccper. Pune conmatet over the kite frame, both back and front. When it is all dry, paste om top of the newspaper cover @ layer of nice white paper. And finally, If you wish, you can paste on top PA ERALODG-DIDHIOPEIGDOIOD O48 4 SODA RAIA DIG ID ODES + July 2, 1881, report of the pistol the runners have); I could re a pasa for the same? rubbed the Irritated spots with this Te the Editor of The Rvening World, lolready beea on thelr tourney for ones) WiLLIAM Q. | preparation and have slept comfortably is) what day aad poor wae President | quarter o dl Ale | No. |!m the midst of the Everglades, where] of this any pleture you want, Feroid sha? J.B. A med by the fash of 1b) To the Biytoe of The Eventne World: the mosquitoes outnumber those off Now comes a very Important point—tastening your kite stol. not by ts report Is not Dee. Ba | holiday through-| the Jersey meadows an! ore cyualled) gtring on. Use the best light, strong string you can find, onty in ferocity by a fomily of orneta To the Editor of ing World: Ves. out the United States? CFO. 4. ‘one end to the first one-fifth of the tong roa of your Can a man cted President) To the Raltor of The Kvening World: Meyor. 815,000: Governor, 810,000) I've from home, Bc. T nd the other end to the second one-third of the of tae United for three or more} Can a Prostdent of the United States and Mansion, Wednesday. attach your flying string by means of a loop, terms? L. B. | be elected a third time (consecutively) | To the Baitor of The Evening World: To the Paltor of The Evening World: Now for the “bobs,” or tall. Por this use a strong cord twelve to sixteen times the length of the kite, Every four inches apart fasten folds of paper to the cord, ending with @ paper tassel. ‘At last you are ready to test the kite, If it circles madly Timed by Flash, Not by Sound, according to law? MS Which gets the larger salary: The To the Edhor of The Evening World: Apply to Offices of 8. 8. Company, | Governor of New York or the Mayor How can the 10-yard dash be timed] go the Editor of The Evening World: of New York? On what day did Nov, 2, cause of the ten ho drank a: the re- . Ceptions,”—Cleveland Frese, ‘Wants take your orders 1 over saw became @ nervous wreck be- boarders, ots as close as one-fifth of a second? Sounl| 1 have four friends visiting the city To Prevent Mesquite Bites. travels 1,142 feet a second, and for 30) at the present time who would very fest it takes about one-quarter of a|/ much like to visit certain big steamers second Therefore when the timers at/ at anchor here and go through the ‘the Galsh of the 10-yard dash hear the| same, Would you kindly tell me how downward you may know that the tall le too Nght. Make it a heavier until finally the proper balance is reached, ‘The result will be a splendid kite at a cost of not more

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